Wednesday, April 4, 2007

the imperial archive

I have been thinking about the relationship between Richard's The Imperial Archive and Rushdie's Midnight's Children. It is a little odd to be commenting on a piece that involves an analysis of Imperial Britain and comparing it to a narrative about a country transitioning from the rule of Imperial Britain to its own rule.

Here are some of the highlights from our discussion of Richards' piece:
  • The British Empire created the most data-intensive empire in history through the unification of knowledge.
  • Imperialism, then, becomes the control of knowledge.
  • Knowledge is both positive and comprehensive for this system.
  • Power draws its breath from knowledge (p. 8).
  • Information and Imperialism are connected.

So what does this have to do with Rushdie?

Everything!

Rushdie's piece is written as a fictional memoir of the events surrounding India's separation from Imperial rule. Simply by writing this piece, Rushdie may be making the following comments concerning imperialism.

  • The data-intensiveness of the unification of knowledge is flawed because it excludes.
  • The control of knowledge only suggests that knowledge can be contained.
  • Knowledge (positive and comprehensive) cannot take into account narrative.
  • India/Rushdie, by creating knowledge in a way different from the imperial archive, gains power.
  • Information and imperialism are connected. The story must be told.

Note the direct relationship between these points and Richards' points. Are these accurate?

2 comments:

mac! said...

did those bullets really publish looking like flowers???? what?

akb said...

awesome. love it.